Horace Silver(1928-2014)
- Music Department
- Soundtrack
Jazz composer-pianist Horace Silver took an interest in music as a
young boy after becoming romantically interested in a 12-year-old girl
who knew how to play the piano. After convincing the object of his
affections to give him piano lessons, young Horace discovered his
niche. He had, however, been exposed early to numerous Afro-American
musical forms as well as a variety of genres from the African Diaspora.
He grew up listening to the folk music of his father's native Cape
Verde, the African island formerly colonized by Portugal. Additionally,
he was entranced by the African-American jazz, gospel and blues
prevalent during his formative years. In high school he played
saxophone and piano, citing
Thelonious Monk and
Bud Powell as major influences during this
period. In 1950 he was hired by saxophonist-composer
Stan Getz. Remaining with Getz for a year,
Silver began to develop his skills as a composer and produced the songs
"Split Kick" and "Potter's Luck". Moving from his native Norwalk,
Connecticut, to New York City in 1951, he played with a long line of
jazz luminaries that included
Miles Davis,
Lester Young,
Coleman Hawkins,
Milt Jackson and
Art Blakey. He signed with Blue Note Records
in 1952 and made many hit records for the label, continuing with the
label until 1980. His stint with the cooperatively-led
The Jazz Messengers (later known
under the leadership of drummer Blakey) began in 1953 when the era of
hard-bop was becoming the new jazz standard. Silver continued to gain
prominence as a band leader, pianist and composer in spite of being
diagnosed in the late 1950s with rheumatoid arthritis in one of his
hands and a malformed spine that resulted from a childhood illness.
From 1960 onward he produced several jazz classics that draw on both
his Afro-Portuguese and Afro-American heritage, as well as Afro-Latin
forms. Among his most notable compositions are "Senor Blues",
"Doodlin'", "Sister Sadie", "The Preacher", "Opus de Funk", "Nica's
Dream" and a 1964 Cape Verdean-Bossa Nova classic called "Song For My
Father". Just as Art Blakey's Band has become legendary as a training
ground for young talent, so did Silver's own band. Among his members
have been the noted jazz saxophonist-composer
Joe Henderson, the Brecker
Brothers, Benny Golson and
Woody Shaw. In 1996 readers of Down Beat
Magazine justifiably voted Silver into the Down Beat Hall of Fame. Not
content to rest on his laurels, he continues to be a major influence on
Jazz musicians everywhere and continues to compose, record and perform
throughout the world.